Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Gregory Auton is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Gregory Auton.


Science | 2016

Negative local resistance caused by viscous electron backflow in graphene

Denis A. Bandurin; Iacopo Torre; R. Krishna Kumar; M. Ben Shalom; Andrea Tomadin; A. Principi; Gregory Auton; Ekaterina Khestanova; K. S. Novoselov; I. V. Grigorieva; L. A. Ponomarenko; A. K. Geim; Marco Polini

Electrons that flow like a fluid Electrons inside a conductor are often described as flowing in response to an electric field. This flow rarely resembles anything like the familiar flow of water through a pipe, but three groups describe counterexamples (see the Perspective by Zaanen). Moll et al. found that the viscosity of the electron fluid in thin wires of PdCoO2 had a major effect on the flow, much like what happens in regular fluids. Bandurin et al. found evidence in graphene of electron whirlpools similar to those formed by viscous fluid flowing through a small opening. Finally, Crossno et al. observed a huge increase of thermal transport in graphene, a signature of so-called Dirac fluids. Science, this issue p. 1061, 1055, 1058; see also p. 1026 Proximity transport measurements find evidence of whirlpools of graphene’s viscous electronic fluid. [Also see Perspective by Zaanen] Graphene hosts a unique electron system in which electron-phonon scattering is extremely weak but electron-electron collisions are sufficiently frequent to provide local equilibrium above the temperature of liquid nitrogen. Under these conditions, electrons can behave as a viscous liquid and exhibit hydrodynamic phenomena similar to classical liquids. Here we report strong evidence for this transport regime. We found that doped graphene exhibits an anomalous (negative) voltage drop near current-injection contacts, which is attributed to the formation of submicrometer-size whirlpools in the electron flow. The viscosity of graphene’s electron liquid is found to be ~0.1 square meters per second, an order of magnitude higher than that of honey, in agreement with many-body theory. Our work demonstrates the possibility of studying electron hydrodynamics using high-quality graphene.


Nano Letters | 2015

Super-narrow, extremely high quality collective plasmon resonances at telecom wavelengths and their application in a hybrid graphene-plasmonic modulator.

Benjamin D. Thackray; Philip Thomas; Gregory Auton; Francisco Rodríguez; Owen P. Marshall; V. G. Kravets; A. N. Grigorenko

We present extremely narrow collective plasmon resonances observed in gold nanostripe arrays fabricated on a thin gold film, with the spectral line full width at half-maximum (fwhm) as low as 5 nm and quality factors Q reaching 300, at important fiber-optic telecommunication wavelengths around 1.5 μm. Using these resonances, we demonstrate a hybrid graphene-plasmonic modulator with the modulation depth of 20% in reflection operated by gating of a single layer graphene, the largest measured so far.


Nature Communications | 2016

Graphene ballistic nano-rectifier with very high responsivity

Gregory Auton; Jiawei Zhang; Roshan Krishna Kumar; Hanbin Wang; Xijian Zhang; Qingpu Wang; E. W. Hill; Aimin Song

Although graphene has the longest mean free path of carriers of any known electronic material, very few novel devices have been reported to harness this extraordinary property. Here we demonstrate a ballistic nano-rectifier fabricated by creating an asymmetric cross-junction in single-layer graphene sandwiched between boron nitride flakes. A mobility ∼200,000 cm2 V−1 s−1 is achieved at room temperature, well beyond that required for ballistic transport. This enables a voltage responsivity as high as 23,000 mV mW−1 with a low-frequency input signal. Taking advantage of the output channels being orthogonal to the input terminals, the noise is found to be not strongly influenced by the input. Hence, the corresponding noise-equivalent power is as low as 0.64 pW Hz−1/2. Such performance is even comparable to superconducting bolometers, which however need to operate at cryogenic temperatures. Furthermore, output oscillations are observed at low temperatures, the period of which agrees with the lateral size quantization.


IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science | 2014

Total Ionizing Dose Effects on hBN Encapsulated Graphene Devices

Cher Xuan Zhang; Bin Wang; Guo Xing Duan; En Xia Zhang; Daniel M. Fleetwood; Michael L. Alles; Ronald D. Schrimpf; Aidan P. Rooney; Ekaterina Khestanova; Gregory Auton; R. V. Gorbachev; Sarah J. Haigh; Sokrates T. Pantelides

The constant-voltage electrical stress and 10-keV X-ray irradiation responses of encapsulated graphene-hBN devices are evaluated. Both constant-voltage stress and X-ray exposure induce only modest shifts in the current and the Dirac point of the graphene. Charge trapping at or near the graphene/BN interface is observed after X-ray irradiation. The experimental results suggest that net hole trapping occurs in the BN at low doses and that net electron trapping occurs at higher doses. First-principles calculations also demonstrate that hydrogenated substitutional carbon impurities at B/N sites at or near the graphene/BN interface can play an additional role in the radiation response of these structures.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Strong coupling of diffraction coupled plasmons and optical waveguide modes in gold stripe-dielectric nanostructures at telecom wavelengths

Philip Thomas; Gregory Auton; Dmytro Kundys; A. N. Grigorenko; V. G. Kravets

We propose a hybrid plasmonic device consisting of a planar dielectric waveguide covering a gold nanostripe array fabricated on a gold film and investigate its guiding properties at telecom wavelengths. The fundamental modes of a hybrid device and their dependence on the key geometric parameters are studied. A communication length of 250 μm was achieved for both the TM and TE guided modes at telecom wavelengths. Due to the difference between the TM and TE light propagation associated with the diffractive plasmon excitation, our waveguides provide polarization separation. Our results suggest a practical way of fabricating metal-nanostripes-dielectric waveguides that can be used as essential elements in optoelectronic circuits.


Science | 2017

High-temperature quantum oscillations caused by recurring Bloch states in graphene superlattices

R. Krishna Kumar; X. Chen; Gregory Auton; Artem Mishchenko; Denis A. Bandurin; S.V. Morozov; Yang Cao; Ekaterina Khestanova; M. Ben Shalom; Andrey V. Kretinin; K. S. Novoselov; L. Eaves; I. V. Grigorieva; L. A. Ponomarenko; V. I. Fal’ko; A. K. Geim

Heat-loving quantum oscillations The shape of the Fermi surface in a conductor can be gleaned through quantum oscillations—periodic changes in transport properties as an external magnetic field is varied. Like most quantum properties, the phenomenon can usually be observed only at very low temperatures. Krishna Kumar et al. report quantum oscillations in graphene that do not go away even at the temperature of boiling water. Although “ordinary,” low-temperature quantum oscillations die away, another oscillatory behavior sets in that is extremely robust to heating. These resilient oscillations appear only in samples in which graphene is nearly aligned with its hexagonal boron nitride substrate, indicating that they are caused by the potential of the moiré superlattice that forms in such circumstances. Science, this issue p. 181 Magnetotransport in graphene–hexagonal boron nitride heterostructures exhibits robust oscillations. Cyclotron motion of charge carriers in metals and semiconductors leads to Landau quantization and magneto-oscillatory behavior in their properties. Cryogenic temperatures are usually required to observe these oscillations. We show that graphene superlattices support a different type of quantum oscillation that does not rely on Landau quantization. The oscillations are extremely robust and persist well above room temperature in magnetic fields of only a few tesla. We attribute this phenomenon to repetitive changes in the electronic structure of superlattices such that charge carriers experience effectively no magnetic field at simple fractions of the flux quantum per superlattice unit cell. Our work hints at unexplored physics in Hofstadter butterfly systems at high temperatures.


Physical Review B | 2016

Scaling approach to tight-binding transport in realistic graphene devices: The case of transverse magnetic focusing

M. Beconcini; S. Valentini; R. Krishna Kumar; Gregory Auton; A. K. Geim; L. A. Ponomarenko; Marco Polini; F. Taddei

Ultraclean graphene sheets encapsulated between hexagonal boron nitride crystals host two-dimensional electron systems in which low-temperature transport is solely limited by the sample size. We revisit the theoretical problem of carrying out microscopic calculations of nonlocal ballistic transport in such micron-scale devices. By employing the Landauer-Buttiker scattering theory, we propose a scaling approach to tight-binding nonlocal transport in realistic graphene devices. We test our numerical method against experimental data on transverse magnetic focusing (TMF), a textbook example of nonlocal ballistic transport in the presence of a transverse magnetic field. This comparison enables a clear physical interpretation of all the observed features of the TMF signal, including its oscillating sign.


Microscopy and Microanalysis | 2016

X-Ray Absorption Correction for Quantitative Scanning Transmission Electron Microscopic Energy-Dispersive X-Ray Spectroscopy of Spherical Nanoparticles

Thomas J. A. Slater; Yiqiang Chen; Gregory Auton; Nestor J. Zaluzec; Sarah J. Haigh

A new method to perform X-ray absorption correction for spherical particles in quantitative energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy in the scanning transmission electron microscope is presented. An absorption correction factor is derived and simulated data is presented encompassing a range of X-ray absorption conditions. Theoretical calculations are compared with experimental data of X-ray counts from Au nanoparticles to verify the derived methodology. The effect of detector elevation angle is considered and a comparison with thin-film absorption correction is included.


Nano Letters | 2017

Terahertz Detection and Imaging Using Graphene Ballistic Rectifiers

Gregory Auton; D. But; Jiawei Zhang; E. W. Hill; D. Coquillat; C. Consejo; P. Nouvel; W. Knap; L. Varani; F. Teppe; J. Torres; Aimin Song

A graphene ballistic rectifier is used in conjunction with an antenna to demonstrate a rectenna as a terahertz (THz) detector. A small-area (<1 μm2) local gate is used to adjust the Fermi level in the device to optimize the output while minimizing the impact on the cutoff frequency. The device operates in both n- and p-type transport regimes and shows a peak extrinsic responsivity of 764 V/W and a corresponding noise equivalent power of 34 pW Hz-1/2 at room temperature with no indications of a cutoff frequency up to 0.45 THz. The device also demonstrates a linear response for more than 3 orders of magnitude of input power due to its zero threshold voltage, quadratic current-voltage characteristics and high saturation current. Finally, the device is used to take an image of an optically opaque object at 0.685 THz, demonstrating potential in both medical and security imaging applications.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

Hybrid grapheme plasmonic waveguide modulators

D. Ansell; Benjamin D. Thackray; D. E. Aznakayeva; Philip Thomas; Gregory Auton; Owen P. Marshall; Francisco Rodríguez; Ilya P. Radko; Zhanghua Han; Sergey I. Bozhevolnyi; A. N. Grigorenko

The unique optical and electronic properties of graphene allow one to realize active optical devices. While several types of graphene-based photonic modulators have already been demonstrated, the potential of combining the versatility of graphene with sub-wavelength field confinement of plasmonic/metallic structures is not fully realized. Here we report fabrication and study of hybrid graphene-plasmonic modulators. We consider several types of modulators and identify the most promising one for light modulation at telecom and near-infrared. Our proof-of-concept results pave the way towards on-chip realization of efficient graphene-based active plasmonic waveguide devices for optical communications.

Collaboration


Dive into the Gregory Auton's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

E. W. Hill

University of Manchester

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

A. K. Geim

University of Manchester

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jiawei Zhang

University of Manchester

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge